3.8 Article

Universalising Healthcare in India: Managing the Provider-Purchaser Split

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEALTH MANAGEMENT
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages 53-67

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INDIA PVT LTD
DOI: 10.1177/09720634231153235

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Several countries have achieved universal health coverage (UHC) through political processes, increased health spending, and increased pooled spending. A study was conducted to understand the provider-purchaser relationship in achieving UHC. The research analyzed experiences from developed and developing economies, such as Italy, the UK, Germany, Australia, Japan, Canada, China, USA, and Brazil, to compare practices and their impact. Countries with UHC have well-defined service packages funded by the government, supplemented by private insurance, with a focus on regulation and governance.
Several countries with diverse health systems have achieved universalization (UHC). The trajectory towards universal coverage almost always has three typical features: (i) a political process driven by a range of regulatory changes to simplify access; (ii) an increase in health spending; (iii) an increase in the share of pooled spending rather than paid out-of-pocket. Therefore, a study was undertaken to understand the extent of the provider-purchaser relationship of governments to achieve UHC while reforming healthcare. The present paper focuses on extensive secondary research across countries and evaluates the experiences of select developed and developing economies with India's experiments on- Financing mechanisms, management arrangements, governance and health outcomes; to offer a comparison of practices and their impact. While Italy, the UK, Germany, Australia, Japan, Canada and most recently China are countries that have achieved UHC; countries like USA and Brazil are on the verge of achieving UHC. These nine countries represent the entire spectrum of pure purchasing models, mixed and pure provisioning models to help us leverage from their experience. All countries that have attained UHC have a well-defined package of services that the government commits to fund and provide for (both public and private). Additionalities around wellness and cosmetic care is managed through supplementary insurance. Overall funding is through an autonomous body, at arm's length of government; primarily to govern and manage the state's health priorities. And the government purely behaves as a regulator setting policy and giving directions to the providers. However, ensuring the sustenance of such a mixed model requires; (i) a well-regulated ecosystem that thrives on evidence, (ii) the governments must clearly define the role/s of each stakeholder and hold them accountable for their deliverables in attaining UHC.

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